Description
Mizejewski traces the Ziegfeld Girl's connections to turn-of-the-century celebrity culture, black Broadway, the fashion industry, and the changing sexual and gender identities evident in mainstream entertainment during the Ziegfeld years. In addition, she emphasizes how crises of immigration and integration made the identity and whiteness of the American Girl an urgent issue on Broadway's revue stages during that era. Although her focus is on the showgirl as a "type," the analysis is intermingled with discussions of figures like Anna Held, Fanny Brice, and Bessie McCoy, the Yama Yama girl, as well as Ziegfeld himself. Finally, Mizejewski discusses the classic American films that have most vividly kept this showgirl alive in both popular and camp culture, including The Great Ziegfeld, Ziegfeld Girl, and the Busby Berkeley musicals that cloned Ziegfeld's showgirls for decades.
Ziegfeld Girl will appeal to scholars and students in American studies, popular culture, theater and performance studies, film history, gender studies, gay and lesbian studies, and social history.
About the Author
Linda Mizejewski is Associate Professor of English at Ohio State University and the author of Divine Decadence: Fascism, Female Spectacle, and the Makings of Sally Bowles.
Reviews
"Mizejewski brings together issues of consumerism, fashion, nationalism, and performance in a volume that is packed full of information and analysis. It is conceptually focused, theoretically sophisticated, and jargon free."-Jane Desmond, author of Meaning in Motion: New Cultural Studies of Dance
"A smart, assured book about the construction of an important figure in America who represents a contradictory, and perhaps uniquely American, constellation of types-the chorus girl, the ideal beauty, the golddigger, the perfect wife, and the tramp-all bundled into one glorified pulchritudinous package."-Pamela Robertson, author of Guilty Pleasures: Feminist Camp from Mae West to Madonna
Book Information
ISBN 9780822323037
Author Linda Mizejewski
Format Hardback
Page Count 256
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press
Weight(grams) 644g